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Btw I like your rig. Very nicely done and it's nice to see someone who realizes how much better your system sounds with quality room treatment and traps.
IMHO and the experience in my room , the tri-corners are the most important treatment you can do, followed by the wall corners (as in the photo) and, finally, the corner where the ceiling meets the wall at the middle of each wall.
Both Real Traps and GIK make excellent product as well. Compare them to Adapt product for looks and quality. The Response line has a budget look and I will eventually go all Adapt or add some other brand. The Response line works very well aurally but looks pretty ugly.The Adapts lok cool and look professional like GIK and RealTraps.
Ethan is way more qualified to answer your question than I am, but here a few thoughts on why my room looks the way it does:2. I originally had the little tri-corner products from Eighth Nerve and Echo Busters, but when Realtraps came out with their tri-corner, I tried it and thought it improved my sound more than the other products so they stayed.
Why do you think you "shouldn't be"? One thing that isn't clear to me on Ethan's units is the fiberglass on the rear. Are the wells closed, with the fiberglass behind? We do not use fiberglass unfaced in any direction. The emission of fibers into the air you breathe is definitely a problem. The lung association has studies on that. I am glad you are enjoying the sound of diffusion..It is very hard to describe to people, but when they hear it, they always smile!
Dan,> What is the benefit, detriments, or change by using the Tri-Trap up in the corner, instead of covering the entire corner with the traps? <First, just to clarify, we call our triangle shaped bass trap a Tri-Corner trap. --Ethan
First, just to clarify, we call our triangle shaped bass trap a Tri-Corner trap.
So by allowing a gap between the top and bottom of the MondoTrap and the Tri-Corner traps above and below, mids and highs can get to the rear of the panel where they too are absorbed.
There is something about the compression of the fiberglass into a rigid panel that is akin to a spring. It will want to expand. When sound vibrations strike it, some fibers "let go". It appears as a fine dust in the room. THAT is a problem........and a reason we do not use fiberglass at all.